Johnny Young

Johnny Young followed his wife to the internment camps.

About

Written by Annie Luong

John Young was born in Los Angeles’ Old Chinatown in 1923. His father was born in Canton, China and immigrated to the United States in 1870 and was president of the Hop Sing Tong for 13 years. In 1906 he went back to San Francisco to marry Young’s mother who was 35 years his junior. Young recalls, “In those days, you really lived in poverty. My mother never worked. My father just ran the store. But my mother was the one who kept the family going.”

Growing up in Chinatown, Young remembers playing “kick the can”, “roll the hoop,” and other games that they had to create themselves. He attended California Street School up on Bunker Hill and transferred to Macy Street School. He then attended Central High School and later on transferred to Abraham Lincoln High School. He was one of the founding members of Wah Kue, a basketball club that was started in the mid 1930s at Chung Wah Chinese School. At the age of 16, Young and a few other youth opened up a parking lot in a vacant lot, adjacent to New Chinatown. He learned how to drive by parking cars up in the upper and lower parking lots.

During his senior year in high school, Young met Kiyoko Ishihara, his future wife. She asked him out, but he had to work at the parking lot. Young remembers, “We set up a date for another time, and then we started riding the street car home from high school together and meeting each other every morning and riding the street car to high school.” After they graduated in 1941, they got engaged in November and on February 14th, 1942, they married on Valentine’s Day. At that time they were only 18 years old and “so young and in love.”

In April, his wife entered Manzanar, a Japanese internment camp, and he soon followed in May. Their first daughter was born in March 1943 and they were released. The camps were “just army barracks. It was about 120 feet long, and they divided it into four sections and two or three families in a small quarter.” He remembers there were “a lot of doctors. The wages were $12 to $16 for ordinary laborers to $19 a month for professionals, like doctors and nurses…Before I went in, I was making about $35 a week as a truck driver for produce.”After Young was released, he registered for the army and on September 1st, he was drafted. In cadet training, Young was sent to Denver for more testing and was then shipped to La Grande. He went to college there and graduated from the pilot and navigator program in 1944. Young was in the Squadron 306 bomb group and volunteered to go overseas. In February 1945 he was stationed in Thurleigh, which is a village north of Bedfordshire, England. He recalls that “out of 36 planes, we’d lose maybe one or two. It wasn’t too bad.” When the war ended, Young had flown 16 combat missions in his 27 months of service. He stayed in the service on camera mission in Russia until he was finally discharged in 1946.

Features

Interviewed by William Gow
Chinatown Remembered Project
March 29th, 2008

William Gow: What was your wife’s name?

Johnny Young: Kiyoko Ishihara. They had a … right by the First Street bridge, just west of it. They had a hotel there. That’s where the mother lost everything. Because they couldn’t take any radio or camera or any furniture with them when we went into Manzanar. They went in April with my wife. Anybody who had a tinge of Japanese blood would have to go in there at the time.

William Gow: She was full Japanese?

Johnny Young: Yes, she was full Japanese.

William Gow: You met her in high school in 41?

Johnny Young: Oh yeah, right before graduation.

William Gow: Was it was after Pearl Harbor?

Johnny Young: It was after… no, no, it was before Pearl Harbor in ‘41. We graduated in June ‘41 and Pearl Harbor happened in December.

William Gow: When it happened do you remember where you were?

Johnny Young: Oh yes. I was in Chinatown parking cars. No, no. I got a job at the market as a swapper. I worked on the produce.

William Gow: City market?

Johnny Young: Yeah, City Market, yeah.

William Gow: You were working that Sunday?

Johnny Young: You know, I don’t remember. I probably was working… No, I wasn’t working Sunday. I was probably at the beach. In fact, I had funny hours. I was a receiver and I used to go to work at 12 midnight and I was off about four or five o clock in the morning. And I used to laugh with my wife: “When I go to work, you are in bed when I come from work you are still in bed.” It was six o’clock in the morning [chuckles].

William Gow: When Pearl Harbor was bombed, did you and your wife talk about it?

Johnny Young: She felt real bad about it. She was so Americanized. We were both Americanized.

William Gow: Was there any inclination in your circles about internment coming up.

Johnny Young: Yeah, we heard about it. In fact, I went to Pasadena to meet with some general and try to talk to him, but I couldn’t get in to see him. Got his name though. So, we prepare her to enter Manzanar with her family. First, they went to Santa Anita and slept in the horse stable, stayed there about a month until they got the barracks up in Indio County. She went in there in April, and I went in May. Being so young and in love. That’s when she got pregnant. That’s where we had our daughter.

William Gow: How did you decided to join her?

Johnny Young: I just decide to go in there. I told my dad and mother. They said whatever you want, that’s your life.

William Gow: How did you do it?

Johnny Young: No, I took the bus up there. I sold my car and lost some money on it. I had a ‘35 Ford.